The EU is Really Good at Undermining Certain Things

The EU should “do its best to undermine” the “homogeneity” of its member states, the UN’s special representative for migration has said.

Peter Sutherland told peers the future prosperity of many EU states depended on them becoming multicultural.

What they’re really good at, however, is undermining their own financial stability, which is due in part to the cultural disparities among the states in the Euro zone. Before they adopt a homogenised culture, they need to stop and think: which one? Or what will our new culture look like? Will we go broke with our new culture as fast as we are with our current ones? Or faster?

His hat tip to the Americans, Aussies and Kiwis is interesting:

The UN special representative on migration was also quizzed about what the EU should do about evidence from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) that employment rates among migrants were higher in the US and Australia than EU countries.

He told the committee: “The United States, or Australia and New Zealand, are migrant societies and therefore they accommodate more readily those from other backgrounds than we do ourselves, who still nurse a sense of our homogeneity and difference from others.

Our status as a migrant society, however, is being undermined by identity politics, which is turning our country’s “melting pot” into a millet system, worthy of the Ottomans. A key to our ability to absorb immigration successfully is to inculcate our American culture into the immigrants, a process subverted by the millet multiculturalists.